John Reeves

Soldier of Destiny: Slavery, Secession, and the Redemption of Ulysses S. Grant

From the publisher

Presenting an original, thought-provoking look at Ulysses S. Grant, Soldier of Destiny evokes the life of the general through his conflicted connection to slavery, allowing readers a clearer understanding of this great American.

Captain Ulysses S. Grant, an obscure army officer who was expelled for alcohol abuse in 1854, rose to become general-in-chief of the United States Army in 1864. What accounts for this astonishing turn-around during this extraordinary decade? Was it destiny? Or was he just an ordinary man, opportunistically benefiting from the turmoil of the Civil War to advance to the highest military rank?

Soldier of Destiny reveals that Grant always possessed the latent abilities of a skilled commander—and he was able to develop these skills out West without the overwhelming pressure faced by more senior commanders in the Eastern theater at the beginning of the Civil War. Grant was a true Westerner himself and it was his experience in the West—before and during the Civil War—that was central to his rise.

From 1861 to 1864, Grant went from being ambivalent about slavery to becoming one of the leading individuals responsible for emancipating the slaves. Before the war, he lived in a pro-slavery community near St. Louis, where there were very few outright abolitionists. During the war, he gradually realized that Emancipation was the only possible outcome of the war that would be consistent with America’s founding values and future prosperity. Soldier of Destiny tells the story of Grant’s connection to slavery in far more detail than has been done in previous biographies.

Grant’s life story is an almost inconceivable tale of redemption within the context of his fraught relationships with his antislavery father and his slaveholding wife. This narrative explores the poverty, inequality, and extraordinary vitality of the American West during a crucial time in our nation’s history. Writers on Grant have tended to overlook his St. Louis years (1854-1860), even though they are essential for understanding his later triumphs.

Walt Whitman described Grant as “a common trader, money-maker, tanner, farmer of Illinois—general for the republic, in its terrific struggle with itself, in the war of attempted secession. Nothing heroic, as the authorities put it—and yet the greatest hero. The gods, the destinies, seem to have concentrated upon him.”
Reviews

“In a tightly focused narrative animated by vivid battle depictions, Mr. Reeves connects Grant’s personal and professional redemption to the country’s. Absorbing.”– The Wall Street Journal

“Reeves’s book provides a well-written and accessible approach to this crucial decade in Grant’s life. The work focuses on many intriguing yet understudied aspects of Grant’s life, including his family relationships and antebellum career in Missouri. Few Grant biographers contend with Grant’s problematic relationship with slavery to the extent that Reeves does…readers interested in Grant’s family relationships, views on slavery, and Civil War career would do well to read Reeves’s intelligent book.” – Civil War Book Review

“Mr. Reeves wants us to share that intimacy to drive home how this person — not just the historical figure—began to behave in new ways.” – The New York Sun 

“An enlightening look at how Ulysses S. Grant benefited from slavery years before he helped end the institution. Reeves manages to stitch Grant’s flaws and virtues into a thought-provoking portrait of a key historical figure who never lost faith in himself or his country.”– Associated Press

“Reeves has a clear, gentle writing style, which makes for an easy read…If you have not read much about Grant the man before, this book is a good place to start.” – Emerging Civil War

Soldier of Destiny appears to be a straightforward biography, but this concise, simple narrative has deeper currents. Reeves’ book is more than an intimate study of Grant and his family in a critical period of the future president’s life; it is a study of a white middle-class America in which economics, politics, and technology rapidly changed their society at the terrible cost of the American Civil War.”– New York Journal of Books

“Grant’s contradictions and complexities are on full display in this candid biography.”– Publishers Weekly

“A fine account of the formative years of Ulysses S. Grant. A capable portrait of Grant’s critical period, with more than the usual attention to his racial views.”– Kirkus Reviews

“This thoroughly researched and detailed book offers keen insight into Grant as an evolving soul attempting to navigate the trials and tribulations of life. It also dispels some of the myths of the future Union general as a wholly unsuited businessman and unstable drunk…Soldier of Destiny is a masterful account of the decisive Grant and how he remained resilient while ‘lost in the wilderness,’ only to emerge as a sword of deliverance at the moment his country needed him most.”– HistoryNet

“Reeves has done a superb job of tracing the evolution of Grant’s attitude toward slavery under the influence first of his antislavery father and then of his slaveholding wife and proslavery father-in-law. But it was the impact of his experience as a Civil War commander that shaped his ultimate conviction that slavery must go if the Union was to be preserved and given a new birth of freedom. An added bonus of Reeves’ lucid portrayal of this process is the most sensible and even-handed treatment of the issue of Grant’s drinking that I have encountered.”– James M. McPherson, Pulitzer Prize winning author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era 

[Recorded on June 27, 2024]

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      John Reeves is the author of The Lost Indictment of Robert E. Lee. He has taught European and American history at Lehman College, Bronx Community College, and Southbank University in London. John received an MA in European history from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He lives near Washington, DC.


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